Dictionary Definition
disgusting adj : highly offensive; arousing
aversion or disgust; "a disgusting smell"; "distasteful language";
"a loathsome disease"; "the idea of eating meat is repellent to
me"; "revolting food"; "a wicked stench" [syn: disgustful, distasteful, foul, loathly, loathsome, repellent, repellant, repelling, revolting, skanky, wicked, yucky]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Adjective
Translations
repulsive, distasteful
- Chinese: 憎恶 (zēng ĕ)
- Finnish: kuvottava, törkeä
- French: degoutant, deguelasse
- German: ekelhaft
- Hebrew: מגעיל (mag'yl)
- Icelandic: viðbjóðslegur , viðbjóðsleg , viðbjóðslegt ; ógeðslegur , ógeðsleg , ógeðslegt
- Italian: disgustoso, nauseante, stomachevole, rivoltante
- Scottish Gaelic: gràineil, oillteil, sgrathail
- Spanish: asqueroso, repulsivo, nauseabundo
Verb
disgusting- present participle of disgust
Extensive Definition
Disgust is an emotion that is typically
associated with things that are perceived as unclean, inedible, or infectious. In
The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals, Charles
Darwin wrote that disgust refers to something revolting.
Primarily in relation to the sense of taste, as actually perceived
or vividly imagined; and secondarily to anything which causes a
similar feeling, through the sense of smell, touch, and even of
eyesight. Disgust is one of the basic emotions of Robert
Plutchik's theory of emotions. Disgust invokes a characteristic
facial expression, one of Paul Ekman's
six universal facial expressions of emotion. It is also associated
with a fall in heart rate, in contrast, for example, to fear or anger.
Disgust may be further subdivided into physical
disgust, associated with physical or metaphorical uncleanness, and moral disgust, a similar
feeling related to courses of action.
Origins and development
Disgust is thought to have its origins in (and in some cases to be identical to) instinctive reactions that evolved as part of natural selection for behavior which tended to prevent food poisoning, or exposure to danger of infection. Disgust is frequently associated with waste products such as feces or urine, secretions from the human body (such as mucus), and with decomposing flesh, and insects, such as maggots, associated with it.As in other human instinctual drives, disgust
has an instinctual and a socially
constructed aspect. Psychologist Paul Rozin has
studied the development of feelings of disgust in children.
Jonathan
Haidt is a researcher whose work involves exploring the
relationship between disgust and various traditional concepts of
morality. His theory of
social
intuitionism seeks to explain the apparently irrational and
visceral reactions to violations of the moral order.
Disgust and shame
Martha Nussbaum, a leading American philosopher, wrote a book published in 2004 entitled Hiding From Humanity: Disgust, Shame, and the Law which examines the relationship of disgust and shame to a society's laws.A recent study found that women and children were more sensitive to
disgust than men. Researchers attempted to explain this finding in
evolutionary terms.
While some find wisdom in adhering to one's feelings of disgust,
some scientists have asserted that "reactions of disgust are often
built upon prejudices that should be challenged and
rebutted."
Brain structures
Functional MRI experiments have revealed that the anterior insula in the brain is particularly active when experiencing disgust, when being exposed to offensive tastes, and when viewing facial expressions of disgust.Huntington's disease
Many patients suffering from Huntington's disease, a genetically transmitted progressive neurodegenerative disease, are unable to recognize expressions of disgust in others and also don't show reactions of disgust to foul odors or tastes. The inability to recognize disgust in others appears in carriers of the Huntington gene before other symptoms appear.See also
References
External links
- Nancy Sherman, a researcher investigating disgust
- Jon Haidt's page about the Disgust Scale
- Moral Judgment and the Social Intuitionist Model, publications by Jonathan Haidt on disgust and its relationship with moral ideas
- Hiding from Humanity: Disgust, Shame, and the Law
- Shame and Group Psychotherapy
- "Is repugnance wise? Visceral responses to biotechnology" Nature Biotechnology
- Purity and Pollution by Jonathan Kirkpatrick (RTF)
- Paper on the economic effects of Repugnance
- Anatomy of Disgust, Channel 4 program
disgusting in Danish: Ækel
disgusting in German: Ekel
disgusting in Basque: Higuin
disgusting in French: Dégoût
disgusting in Korean: 혐오
disgusting in Ido: Repugneso
disgusting in Italian: Disgusto
disgusting in Polish: Wstręt (emocja)
disgusting in Portuguese: Nojo
disgusting in Russian: Неприятие
disgusting in Simple English: Disgust
disgusting in Slovak: Hnus
disgusting in Swedish: Äckel
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abhorrent, abject, abominable, arrant, atrocious, awful, barfy, base, beastly, beggarly, below contempt,
beneath contempt, blameworthy, brutal, cheesy, contemptible, crappy, crude, crummy, debased, degraded, deplorable, depraved, despicable, detestable, dire, dirty, distasteful, dreadful, egregious, enormous, execrable, fecal, feculent, fetid, filthy, flagrant, flyblown, forbidding, foul, fulsome, gloppy, grave, grievous, gross, gunky, hateful, heinous, horrible, horrid, icky, ignoble, infamous, lamentable, little, loathsome, lousy, low, low-down, lumpen, maggoty, malodorous, mangy, mean, measly, mephitic, miasmal, miasmic, miserable, monstrous, mucky, nasty, nauseating, nefarious, noisome, notorious, noxious, objectionable, obnoxious, obscene, odious, offensive, ordurous, outrageous, paltry, petty, pitiable, pitiful, poky, poor, puky, putrid, rank, rebarbative, regrettable, repellent, reprehensible, reptilian, repugnant, repulsive, revolting, rotten, sad, scabby, scandalous, schlock, scrubby, scruffy, scummy, scurfy, scurvy, shabby, shameful, shitty, shocking, shoddy, sickening, slabby, slimy, sloppy, sloshy, sludgy, slushy, small, sordid, sposhy, squalid, stinking, terrible, too bad, unappetizing, unclean, unmentionable, unsavory, vile, villainous, vomity, woeful, wormy, worst, worthless, wretched, yecchy